Word: punditing
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...London meanwhile his great good wisher News Pundit Walter Lippmann was publicly giving him this free advice: "The Conference Should Adjourn. . . . The essential facts are quite clear. The United States will not stabilize its currency until a sufficient rise in prices has been achieved. The gold countries will not consider a, devaluation of their currencies or an inflationary policy. The British Government are unable to take a decisive position. . . . To safeguard his [domestic] program the President has wisely rejected all proposals which would interfere with it. He has not been afraid to deadlock the Conference. Why should he be afraid...
Elected. To be trustees of: Mills (Oakland. Calif, women's college), Herbert Hoover; of Cornell, Publisher Frank E. Gannett; of Brown, Charles Evans Hughes Jr. To Harvard's Board of Overseers: Political Pundit Walter Lippmann, Banker Henry Sturgis Morgan...
Union College (Schenectady, N.Y.) Walter Lippman, newspaper pundit ... LL.D. Dean Harold David Alexander of Albany Law School .... LL.D. R.F.C. Director Charles Addison Miller .... LL.D...
Many a newsreader looked for what the most respected commentator of all, Pundit Walter Lippmann, would have to say in the Herald Tribune. To him the Senate investigation pointed a large question, and a need for reform whichever way the question might be answered. The question: "Whether . . . there is a Money Trust directed by J. P. Morgan & Co.- or whether the business [of capital investment] is ... highly competitive and dangerously chaotic...
...failure along with the Hoover Farm Board. If all prices start to rise on a broad front, Secretary Wallace will be able to accelerate the advance of farm values, get credit for a shining success. The major factors which will decide the economic fate of the farmer, according to Pundit Walter Lippmann, are "the monetary policy of the administration and of the Federal Reserve System, by the policy of the Government in respect to tariffs and trade agreements and international debts and by a whole series of measures dealing with railroads, real estate indebtedness and banks...